Curriculum Vitae

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Curriculum Vitae Curriculum Vitae PERSONAL INFORMATION Sun Juncai 孙俊才 Educational Department Qufu Normal University NO.57,Jing Xuan West Road, Qufu, Shan Dong Province, China Tel:18660472316 E-mail: [email protected] EDUCATION Post-Doctoral. In Confucian culture and cultural psychology, march 2014, Qufu Normal University. Ph.D. in Educational and Development psychology, June 2008 Shanghai Normal University, XuHui District, Shanghai M.A. in General Psychology, June 2005 Nanjing Normal University, Nanjing, JiangSu Province B.A. in Education, June 1998 Shan Dong Normal University, Jinan City, ShanDong Province CERTIFICATE AND FELLOWSHIPS CET-6, June 2009 PUBLICATIONS 1. Sun Juncai. (2014). The classification and optimization of emotion regulation goals. Journal of Psychological Science, 37(1): 240-244. 2.Sun Juncai. (2013). Emotion regulation: Buffer mechanism of socially sharing emotions affecting social action. Journal of shandong normal university (humanities and social science edition). 3. Sun Juncai. (2009). A Survey of the Public View of college Students Social Sharing of Emotion. Journal of Psychological Science, 32(1): 201-203. 4. Sun Juncai. (2007). Early - adolescent Perception s of Expressive Modes and Their Relation ship to Peer Acceptance. Journal of Psychological Science, 30(5): 1052-1056. 5. Sun Juncai. (2007). The Review on and Prospects for Social Sharing of Emotion. Advances in Psychological Science, 15(5): 816-821. 6. Sun Juncai, Wenjun. (2007). The Sociology of Emotions. Wrote by Jonathan H. Turner and Jane, daz. Shanghai People's Publishing House. 7. Sun Juncai, Wenjun. (2009). Human Emotion: Sociological theory. Wrote by Jonathan H. Turner. BeiJing: Oriental Press. 8. Reward Sun Juncai, Cultural shaping and social construction of emotion: A perspective on the social sharing of emotion. Shanghai Municipal Education Commission. The Council for Higher Education in Shanghai. .
Recommended publications
  • Supplemental: First Observation of D+ → Ηµ +Νµ and Measurement of Its
    + + Supplemental: First Observation of D ! ηµ νµ and Measurement of its Decay Dynamics M. Ablikim1, M. N. Achasov10;c, P. Adlarson64, S. Ahmed15, M. Albrecht4, A. Amoroso63A;63C , Q. An60;48, Anita21, X. H. Bai54, Y. Bai47, O. Bakina29, R. Baldini Ferroli23A, I. Balossino24A, Y. Ban38;k, K. Begzsuren26, J. V. Bennett5, N. Berger28, M. Bertani23A, D. Bettoni24A, F. Bianchi63A;63C , J Biernat64, J. Bloms57, A. Bortone63A;63C , I. Boyko29, R. A. Briere5, H. Cai65, X. Cai1;48, A. Calcaterra23A, G. F. Cao1;52, N. Cao1;52, S. A. Cetin51B, J. F. Chang1;48, W. L. Chang1;52, G. Chelkov29;b, D. Y. Chen6, G. Chen1, H. S. Chen1;52, M. L. Chen1;48, S. J. Chen36, X. R. Chen25, Y. B. Chen1;48, W. S. Cheng63C , G. Cibinetto24A, F. Cossio63C , X. F. Cui37, H. L. Dai1;48, J. P. Dai42;g, X. C. Dai1;52, A. Dbeyssi15, R. B. de Boer4, D. Dedovich29, Z. Y. Deng1, A. Denig28, I. Denysenko29, M. Destefanis63A;63C , F. De Mori63A;63C , Y. Ding34, C. Dong37, J. Dong1;48, L. Y. Dong1;52, M. Y. Dong1;48;52, S. X. Du68, J. Fang1;48, S. S. Fang1;52, Y. Fang1, R. Farinelli24A, L. Fava63B;63C , F. Feldbauer4, G. Felici23A, C. Q. Feng60;48, M. Fritsch4, C. D. Fu1, Y. Fu1, X. L. Gao60;48, Y. Gao38;k, Y. Gao61, Y. G. Gao6, I. Garzia24A;24B, E. M. Gersabeck55, A. Gilman56, K. Goetzen11, L. Gong37, W. X. Gong1;48, W. Gradl28, M. Greco63A;63C , L. M. Gu36, M. H. Gu1;48, S. Gu2, Y. T.
    [Show full text]
  • Teaching World History at Chinese Universities: Sity, Shanghai Nonnal L'~
    Teaching Wo': - ,':-, :=- University, Jilin Uni\ef"::'.. '. c ­ Xia Jiguo, Wan Lanjuan sity, Shanghai Uni\ef"l:-..' ',~- ­ University, Hebei Nonn~: " -;:-:­ Teaching World History at Chinese Universities: sity, Shanghai Nonnal L'~. :--, A Survey University, Ningxia l"ni', e~< .. :.: University, Middle Chi:-:2 ,':-. Teachers' College. Sou:~. C--.=. Since the People's Republic of China was founded in 1949, and espe­ University, Liaocheng L~·. =~':­ cially since China carried out refonns from the policy of opening up, University of Science~ :\:~.~ '::~ enonnous progress has been made in world general history education in Shan Teachers' College. C ~-'-~ .::~ China. In order to create a picture of the current teaching conditions of Teachers' College. and J:-,-~.::'-~. this subject at institutions of higher education in China as weil as to teen ofthese uni\'ersitic, 2~c -~ :-.' pinpoint the main channels of transmitting knowledge about world his­ key nonna\ universitie, c:':~ =' ~ :-­ tory to students, we conducted a survey in early 2005. With this project (some are doub\e-counre':. we also intend to provide useful and practical infonnation for scholars are deans or president, \':".' . c', engaged in the study of world general histOI)' and to encourage teaching 14 are leading scholar, :~ :~c ::. refonns in this field. common teachers in 1\ I>".•i ': ., ­ cient to reflect the ba'l~ ~l- ::: :­ I. Statistical information fram the teacher survey China and that its res'.:::, :--: _ hand material that is th(\:.L:~:-:-~:, : We distributed one questionnaire to 50 universities, invlting a teacher At the 37 universities ~~.-. ;-<.::~ engaged in the teaching and study of ,mrld history to fill it out. I We in teaching and srud\ir.g , ­ received responses from the following 37 universities: East China Nor­ been abroad for fu~he: ,:~:: =, mal University, Shandong University, Wuhan University, Fudan Uni­ shows that the number of ~C':-: - ::: versity, Beijing Nonnal University, Sichuan University, People's Uni­ is 43 (12%); 31 to 40 :ca~'.
    [Show full text]
  • Emission Reduction Decision and Coordination of a Make-To-Order Supply Chain with Two Products Under Cap-And-Trade Regulation
    Accepted Manuscript Emission reduction decision and coordination of a make-to-order supply chain with two products under cap-and-trade regulation Qingguo Bai, Jianteng Xu, Yingyu Zhang PII: S0360-8352(18)30123-2 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cie.2018.03.032 Reference: CAIE 5136 To appear in: Computers & Industrial Engineering Received Date: 21 September 2017 Revised Date: 24 January 2018 Accepted Date: 19 March 2018 Please cite this article as: Bai, Q., Xu, J., Zhang, Y., Emission reduction decision and coordination of a make-to- order supply chain with two products under cap-and-trade regulation, Computers & Industrial Engineering (2018), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cie.2018.03.032 This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. Title Page Title: Emission reduction decision and coordination of a make-to-order supply chain with two products under cap-and-trade regulation Authors: Qingguo Bai, Jianteng Xu, Yingyu Zhang Author affiliations: School of Management, Qufu Normal University, Rizhao, 276826, China; Corresponding Author: Name: Qingguo Bai Address: School of Management, Qufu Normal University, No.80, Yantai Road, Donggang District, Rizhao City, Shandong Province, 276826, P.R.China E-mail: [email protected] [email protected] Telephone number: (86)13563337287 Acknowledgements: This work was supported by the National Science Foundation of China under Grant 71771138, Ministry of Education Foundation of Humanities and Social Sciences under Grant 17YJC630004, and National Science Foundation of Shandong Province, China under Grant ZR2017MG009.
    [Show full text]
  • Cysticercosis in Shandong Province, Eastern China
    RESEARCH LETTERS Cysticercosis in Shandong Shandong Province was sent to and registered at Shandong Institute of Parasitic Diseases for therapy. A confirmed case Province, Eastern China was considered on the basis of several criteria that included the following (5): 1) surgically removed nodules identified Gongzhen Liu, Yanshen Li, Yong Cui, as Cysticercus cellulosae by tableting, an incubation test, or Bingcheng Huang, Hongfa Wang, Yanping Chen, histopathologic examination; 2) serum or cerebrospinal fluid Jingxuan Kou, Fuyong Wang, Chongxing Zhang, positive by immunologic examination; 3) patient history of Yong Huang, Yin Li, Meng Wang, Qingkuan Wei, travel to or residence in a disease-endemic area and a history Jin Li, Hui Sun, Kun Yin, Guihua Zhao, Yan Jiang, of tapeworms or contact with tapeworm-infected patients; 4) Xin Mao, Zhenhua Yu, Xin Liu positive results by computed tomography or magnetic reso- nance imaging for neurocysticercosis or for B-mode ultra- Author affiliations: Shandong Institute of Parasitic Diseases, sound for cutaneous muscular or ophthalmic cysticercosis; Shandong Academy of Medical Sciences, and World Health and 5) diagnosis of cysticercosis supported by clinical symp- Organization Collaborating Centre on Vector-Borne Diseases and toms, which could include subcutaneous or muscular nod- Food-Borne Parasitic Diseases, Jining, China (G. Liu, Y. Cui, ules, headache, dizziness, epilepsy, or visual disturbance. All B. Huang, H. Wang, Y. Chen, J. Kou, F. Wang, C. Zhang, cysticercosis cases were recorded in medical records each Y. Huang, Q. Wei, J. Li, H. Sun, K. Yin, G. Zhao, Z. Yu, X. Liu); year. Moreover, the source population for our data represent- Yantai University, Yantai, China (Yanshen Li, X.
    [Show full text]
  • The Prototype Analysis of Ren: a Study on College Students' Implicit
    International Journal of Psychological Studies December, 2009 The Prototype Analysis of Ren: A Study on College Students’ Implicit Theories of Ren Meiting Liu Department of Psychology, Faculty of Education, Qufu Normal University 57 Jing Xuan Rd W., Qufu 273165, Shandong, China E-mail: [email protected] Zhaoxu Li Department of Psychology, Faculty of Education, Qufu Normal University 57 Jing Xuan Rd W., Qufu 273165, Shandong, China School of Psychology, Beijing Normal University 19 Xinjiekouwai Street, Beijing 100875, China E-mail: [email protected] Guangwen Song (Corresponding author) Research Centre of Psychology, Qufu Normal University 57 Jing Xuan Rd W., Qufu 273165, Shandong, China E-mail: [email protected] Fang Kong Department of Psychology, Faculty of Education, Qufu Normal University 57 Jing Xuan Rd W., Qufu 273165, Shandong, China E-mail: [email protected] Jia Liu Department of Psychology, Faculty of Education, Qufu Normal University 57 Jing Xuan Rd W., Qufu 273165, Shandong, China E-mail: [email protected] Abstract This paper reports a preliminary descriptive approach to the representation of the concept of Ren. According to the prototype theory, researchers collected items (words or phrases) including features and implications of Ren from 172 college students, after which the items were simplified and combined, then 145 prototypes were obtained. After that 78 prototypes with high frequency above 7 were selected and arranged randomly to make a questionnaire, then another 300 college students were made to rate centrality of every prototypes to the meaning of Ren in Likert-typed 5 point scale. A factor analysis was made based on the rate. In terms of the result of factor analysis together with content analysis, the prototypes were classified and coded.
    [Show full text]
  • English Teaching Position
    English-Teaching Positions Qufu Normal University, Shandong, China is currently looking for teachers to teach English as a foreign language for the academic year 2020-2021. The contract is from September 1st, 2020 to June 30th, 2021 with a possibility of extension. The workload is between 14-16 hours per week. 1. Qualification 1)Master or higher degree of Arts from an accredited university 2)At least two years of experience in teaching, or formal training from a government-recognized teacher preparation program 3)Native speaker of English 4) Understanding of the pedagogical practices associated with teaching English as a foreign or second language, or comparative literature 5)Demonstrated interpersonal and cross-cultural communication skills 2. Teaching scope Audience: English majors, including undergraduates and graduates; non-English majors, including MA and PhD degree candidates. Classes may be skill-focused, such as listening or reading, or they could be culture- or methodology-based. 3. Compensation 1) Monthly salary RMB 8K-10K depending on academic levels and teaching experiences. Is open to negotiation. 2) 6 weeks of winter vacation with a bonus which is equivalent to a month salary 4. Benefits 1) Furnished 2-bedroom apartment during the stay. Spouse and children are welcome. The water, electricity and heating costs are borne by Qufu, gas bill and personal daily expenses are to own expense. 2) Two-way international flight tickets 3) Basic medical insurance in China 4) Assistance in the Chinese visa application and work permit application. 5. Procedure for the Candidate 1) Send the resume. If qualified, an interview will be arranged 2) Interview 3) If passing the interview, submit the document #2-7 in <6.
    [Show full text]
  • The Study of University Students' Self-Concept
    International Education Studies February, 2010 The Study of University Students’ Self-Concept Xiaofeng Zhang School of Sports Science, Qufu Normal University 57 jing xian Street, Qufu, Shandong 273165, China E-mail: [email protected] Chengzong Li (Corresponding author) School of Education Science, Qufu Normal University 57 jing xian Street, Qufu, Shandong 273165, China E-mail:[email protected] The research is financed by Creativity program subsidize project for postgraduate of ShanDong province.No.SDYC09032. Abstract Objective: Discussed the development of self-concept of university students. Methods: Used “Tennessee Self Concept Scale (TSCS)”, measured 426 university student’s self-concept status. Results: In the dimension of physical self-ethics, self-criticism, self-satisfaction, there were gender differences in university students’ self-concept. Males’ physical-self, self-criticism and self-satisfied were higher than females’, while females’ ethics were higher than males’. When referred to social self-concept, there were special differences. Students majored liberal arts had a higher score than the students of science. There were also differences in self-criticism, for example, the home location, whether only child or not, and the grades. College students also had differences in grade. Conclusion: College students’ self-concept developed to a relatively stable level in the university. Except for a noticeable difference in gender, only a certain dimensions were noticeable in other demographic variables, while self-criticism had remarkable differences in most of them. Keywords: University student, Self-concept Introduction Self-concept is a belief systems, it is the multi-faceted, multi-level cognitive and evaluation of oneself and their relationship with his surroundings.
    [Show full text]
  • Thoughts on the Education of Sinology in Qufu Xun-Jie HUANG
    2017 3rd International Conference on Education and Social Development (ICESD 2017) ISBN: 978-1-60595-444-8 Thoughts on the Education of Sinology in Qufu Xun-Jie HUANG School of Humanities and Social Sciences, China Jiliang University Zhejiang, Hangzhou, China [email protected] Keywords: Sinology Education, School Running Mode. Abstract. In recent years, Chinese culture began to rise. Qufu is the hometown of Confucius, the birthplace of the ancient Confucian culture in recent years, but also the rise of many Ancient Chinese Literature Search educational institutions, but there are also many problems in the development of it. The author reviewed the present situation of the development of the educational institutions of the local Chinese culture, and found out some of the larger and more developed ones. This paper made a study of the classical Chinese teaching in Qufu and its classic teaching methods, reflect on its shortcomings and put forward suggestions for improvement. It attempted to provide a reference for the standardization of today's Chinese culture education. What is Sinology To explore the issue of Chinese culture education, we should first understand the connotation of Chinese culture education, that is, what is the problem of Chinese culture. Chinese history "Ancient Chinese Literature Search" refers to the "imperial" led by the national school, until the Qing Dynasty before the Opium War, this definition has not completely changed. Since the "Western learning" into the China, relative to the traditional western Ancient
    [Show full text]
  • Chinese Students' Perceptions of Characteristics of Effective
    International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education 2015, Volume 27, Number 3, 330-339 http://www.isetl.org/ijtlhe/ ISSN 1812-9129 Chinese Students’ Perceptions of Characteristics of Effective College Teachers: A Mixed Analysis Lingqi Meng Anthony Onwuegbuzie Qufu Normal University Sam Houston State University This study aimed to investigate Chinese students’ perceptions of effective teaching. Four hundred and thirty college students participated in this investigation. They were asked to identify 3 to 6 characteristics of effective college instructors and explain why. Themes were extracted from these qualitative data via constant comparison analysis, which then were analyzed quantitatively via descriptive and canonical discriminant analysis. The results showed that the Ethical theme was the most frequently perceived characteristic of effective college teachers. Interestingly, this theme was not reflected in the teacher evaluation forms that are currently used to evaluate teachers in China. Further, the themes identified in this study were compared with themes identified in Onwuegbuzie et al.’s (2007) study among U.S. students. The theme of Responsive received the lowest endorsement in both countries. Further, the theme of Expert had a very high endorsement rate in both countries. Also, the theme of Student-Centered received the highest endorsement from U.S. participants, in contrast to a modest endorsement from Chinese participants. Three themes, Humorous, Open- Minded, and Glamour, emerged as new themes in the Chinese sample. The implications of these findings are discussed. Student evaluations of teachers (SETs) can be Ellis’s (2005) study. Pedagogical skills, knowledge of tracked as early as the 1920s (Kulik, 2001). Since then, subject, and interpersonal relationships emerged in SETs have been developed for different purposes.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Please Read These Instructions Carefully
    PLEASE READ THESE INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY. MISTAKES IN YOUR CSC APPLICATION COULD LEAD TO YOUR APPLICATION BEING REJECTED. Visit http://studyinchina.csc.edu.cn/#/login to CREATE AN ACCOUNT. • The online application works best with Firefox or Internet Explorer (11.0). Menu selection functions may not work with other browsers. • The online application is only available in Chinese and English. 1 • Please read this page carefully before clicking on the “Application online” tab to start your application. 2 • The Program Category is Type B. • The Agency No. matches the university you will be attending. See Appendix A for a list of the Chinese university agency numbers. • Use the + by each section to expand on that section of the form. 3 • Fill out your personal information accurately. o Make sure to have a valid passport at the time of your application. o Use the name and date of birth that are on your passport. Use the name on your passport for all correspondences with the CLIC office or Chinese institutions. o List Canadian as your Nationality, even if you have dual citizenship. Only Canadian citizens are eligible for CLIC support. o Enter the mailing address for where you want your admission documents to be sent under Permanent Address. Leave Current Address blank. Contact your home or host university coordinator to find out when you will receive your admission documents. Contact information for you home university CLIC liaison can be found here: http://clicstudyinchina.com/contact-us/ 4 • Fill out your Education and Employment History accurately. o For Highest Education enter your current degree studies.
    [Show full text]
  • A Simulation Study on the Risk Assessment of the Modernization of Traditional Sports Culture Based on a Cellular Automaton Model
    Hindawi Mathematical Problems in Engineering Volume 2020, Article ID 5150490, 8 pages https://doi.org/10.1155/2020/5150490 Research Article A Simulation Study on the Risk Assessment of the Modernization of Traditional Sports Culture Based on a Cellular Automaton Model Minhang Liu ,1 Gang Li,2 Qianhui Zhang,3 Xiaoyi Xu,4 and Ruijie Liu5 1School of Public Management, Shandong University of Finance and Economics, Jinan 250014, Shandong, China 2School of PE, Shandong University of Finance and Economics, Jinan 250014, Shandong, China 3Jinan Secondary Vocational School of Technology, Jinan 250000, Shandong, China 4School of Architecture and Urban Planning, Shandong Jianzhu University, Jinan 250101, Shandong, China 5School of Software, Qufu Normal University, Qufu 273165, Shandong, China Correspondence should be addressed to Minhang Liu; [email protected] Received 16 August 2020; Revised 22 September 2020; Accepted 1 October 2020; Published 16 October 2020 Academic Editor: Xinguang Zhang Copyright © 2020 Minhang Liu et al. )is is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Based on the cellular automaton model, the risk of modernization of traditional sports culture is evaluated and measured by using the methods of documentary, interview, and simulation experiments. )e results of simulation experiment show that, in the complex system of the modernization of traditional sports culture, the mutation factors will lead to the sudden decline of the survival suitability of traditional sports culture and the risk of being unable to evolve; in the process of the modernization of traditional sports culture, there are two kinds of risks: self-extinction of dying out and self-extinction of homogenization; risk of dislocation failure lies in the government’s support policies; risk of imbalance between fitness and scale allocation lies in modernity of derivative traditional sports culture.
    [Show full text]
  • Common Languages Majors in Shandong Province Shuwen Tan1,*
    Advances in Social Science, Education and Humanities Research, volume 490 Education, Language and Inter-cultural Communication (ELIC 2020) Study on the English Course Setting for the Non- Common Languages Majors in Shandong Province Shuwen Tan1,* 1College of Foreign Studies, Shandong Technology and Business University, Yantai, Shandong 264005, China *Corresponding author. Email: [email protected] ABSTRACT This study selects nine colleges and universities in Shandong Province that offer non-common language as the research object. Through detailed data, it analyzes the current status of colleges and universities that have offered non-common language majors in the province in terms of English curriculum setting, English ability cultivation and online classroom construction. In view of the existing problems, this paper puts forward some feasible suggestions on the English curriculum setting, talent training requirements and network classroom construction of non-common language majors, and hopes to make some beneficial exploration on the rationalization of English curriculum setting of colleges and universities in the province. Keywords: non-common language majors, college English, course setting I. INTRODUCTION University of Petroleum and Shandong Normal English has been widely recognized as a universal University, have also adopted this mode. language. In a broad sense, non-common language majors refers to majors other than English, such as In Shandong province, most of the colleges and Japanese, Korean, German, Arabic and so on. Non- universities open up English courses for students common language, in its narrow sense, refers to majoring in non-common languages majors , but the languages other than the working languages prescribed current English curriculum still faces big problems in by the United Nations (Jingsheng Lu, 2012) [1].
    [Show full text]